Australian National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System surveillance case definitions
Surveillance Case Definitions for the Australian National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System
As of1 January2017
Anthrax
Australian bat lyssavirus
Avian Influenza in humans
Barmah Forest virus infection
Botulism
Brucellosis
Campylobacteriosis
Chikungunya virus infection
Chlamydial infection (excluding eye infection)
Cholera
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD)
Variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (vCJD)
Cryptosporidiosis
Dengue virus infection
Diphtheria
Donovanosis
Flavivirus infection (unspecified) including Zika virus case definition
Gonococcal infection
Haemolytic uraemic syndrome (HUS)
Haemophilus influenzae serotype b (Hib) (invasive only)
Hepatitis A
Hepatitis B – newly acquired
Hepatitis B – unspecified
Hepatitis C - newly acquired
Hepatitis C - unspecified
Hepatitis D
Hepatitis E
Hepatitis (not elsewhere classified)
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection – individuals less than 18months of age
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) – newly acquired
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) - unspecified individuals over 18 months of ages
Influenza (laboratory confirmed)
Japanese encephalitis virus infection
Legionellosis
Leprosy
Leptospirosis
Listeriosis
Lyssavirus (not elsewhere classified)
Malaria
Measles
Meningococcal infection (Invasive)
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV)
Mumps
Murray Valley encephalitis virus infection
Ornithosis (psittacosis)
Paratyphoid
Pertussis
Plague
Pneumococcal disease (invasive)
Poliovirus infection
Q fever
Rabies
Ross River virus infection
Rubella
Congenital Rubella Infection
Salmonellosis
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC)
Shigellosis
Smallpox
Syphilis - congenital
Infectious Syphilis – less than 2 years duration (includes primary, secondary and early latent)
Syphilis - more than 2 years duration or unspecified duration
Tetanus
Tuberculosis
Tularaemia
Typhoid
Varicella zoster (chickenpox)
Varicella zoster (shingles)
Varicella zoster (unspecified)
Viral haemorrhagic fevers (quarantinable) (Quarantinable – includes Ebola, Marburg, Lassa and Crimean-Congo fevers)
West Nile /Kunjin virus infection
Yellow fever
Appendix A: National notifiable diseases sorted according to disease type
Notice regarding detection of IgGs
Anthrax
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires either:
Laboratory definitive evidence
OR
Laboratory suggestive evidence AND clinical evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of Bacillus anthracis-like organisms or spores confirmed by a reference laboratory.
Laboratory suggestive evidence
Detection of Bacillus anthracis by microscopic examination of stained smears
OR
Detection of Bacillus anthracis by nucleic acid testing.
Clinical evidence
Cutaneous: skin lesion evolving over 1-6 days from a papular through a vesicular stage, to a depressed black eschar invariably accompanied by oedema that may be mild to extensive
OR
Gastrointestinal: abdominal distress characterised by nausea, vomiting, anorexia and followed by fever
OR
Rapid onset of hypoxia, dyspnoea and high temperature, with radiological evidence of mediastinal widening
OR
Meningeal: acute onset of high fever, convulsions, loss of consciousness and meningeal signs and symptoms.
Australian bat lyssavirus
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence only.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of Australian bat lyssavirus confirmed by sequence analysis
OR
Detection of Australian bat lyssavirus by nucleic acid testing.
Avian Influenza in humans
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified. Suspected cases shouldn’t be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence AND clinical evidence
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of an Avian Influenza (AI) virus
OR
Detection of AI by nucleic acid testing using two different targets, e.g. primers specific for influenza A and AI haemagglutinin (genetic sequencing should be employed to confirm diagnosis);
OR
A fourfold or greater rise in antibody titre to the AI virus detected in the outbreak (or AI virus suspected of causing the human infection), based on testing of an acute serum specimen (collected 7 days or less after symptom onset) and a convalescent serum specimen. The convalescent neutralizing antibody titre must also be 80 or higher.
OR
An antibody titre to the AI virus detected in the outbreak (or AI virus suspected of causing the human infection) of 80 or greater in a single serum specimen collected at day 14 or later after symptom onset. The result should be confirmed in at least two different serological assays (i.e. haemagglutinin-inhibition, microneutralisation, positive Western blot, etc).
Note: Tests must be conducted in a national, regional or international influenza laboratory whose Avian Influenza in Humans (AIH) test results are accepted by WHO as confirmatory
Clinical evidence
An acute illness characterised by:
- Fever (>38ºC ) or history of fever AND one or more of; cough OR rhinorrhoea OR myalgia OR headache OR dyspnoea OR diarrhoea;
OR
- Conjunctivitis
OR
- infiltrates or evidence of an acute pneumonia on chest radiograph plus evidence of acute respiratory insufficiency (hypoxaemia, severe tachypnoea).
Probable case
A probable case requires laboratory suggestive evidence AND clinical evidence AND epidemiological evidence
Laboratory suggestive evidence
Confirmation of an influenza A infection but insufficient laboratory evidence for AIH infection.
Clinical evidence
As with confirmed case
Epidemiological evidence
One or more of the following exposures in the 10 days prior to symptom onset:
- Close contact (within 1 metre) with a person (e.g. caring for, speaking with, or touching) who is a probable, or confirmed AIH case;
- Exposure (e.g. handling, slaughtering, defeathering, butchering, preparation for consumption) to poultry or wild birds or their remains or to environments contaminated by their faeces in an area where AI infections in animals or humans have been suspected or confirmed in the last month;
- Consumption of raw or undercooked poultry products in an area where AI infections in animals or humans have been suspected or confirmed in the last month;
- Close contact with a confirmed AI infected animal other than poultry or wild birds (e.g. cat or pig);
- Handling samples (animal or human) suspected of containing AI virus in a laboratory or other setting.
Suspected case
A suspected case requires clinical evidence AND epidemiological evidence
Clinical evidence for suspected case
As with confirmed case
Epidemiological evidence
As with probable case
Note: For overseas exposures, an AI-affected area is defined as a region within a country with confirmed outbreaks of AI strains in birds or detected in humans in the last month (seek advice from the National Incident Room when in doubt). With respect to the H5N1 AI outbreak that commenced in Asia in 2003, information regarding H5-affected countries is available at: With respect to the H7N9 outbreak that commenced in eastern China in 2013, information regarding H7-affected countries is available at:
Barmah Forest virus infection
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence only.
Probable case
A probable case requires laboratory suggestive evidence only.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of Barmah Forest virus
OR
Detection of Barmah Forest virus by nucleic acid testing
OR
IgG seroconversion or a significant increase in IgG antibody level (e.g. fourfold or greater rise in titre) to Barmah Forest virus.
Laboratory suggestive evidence
Detection of Barmah Forest virus IgM AND Barmah Forest virus IgG EXCEPT if Barmah Forest IgG is known to have been detected in a specimen collected greater than 3 months earlier.
Botulism
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence AND clinical evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of Clostridium botulinum
OR
Detection of Clostridium botulinum toxin in blood or faeces.
Clinical evidence
A clinically compatible illness (e.g. diplopia, blurred vision, muscle weakness, paralysis, death).
Brucellosis
Reporting
Both confirmedand probable casesshould be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidenceonly.
Laboratory definitive evidence
1. Isolation of Brucella species
OR
2. Detection of Brucella speciesbynucleic acid testing from a blood sample
OR
3. IgG seroconversion or a significant increase in IgG antibody level (e.g. fourfold or greater rise) to Brucella.
Probable case
A probable case requires laboratory suggestiveand clinical evidence.
Laboratory suggestive evidence
1. A single high agglutination titre to Brucella
OR
2. Detection of Brucella species by nucleic acid testing from a normally sterile site other than blood.
Clinical evidence
A clinically compatible illness.
Campylobacteriosis
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence only.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation or detection of Campylobacter species.
Chikungunya virus infection
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
1. Isolation of chikungunya virus
OR
2. Detection of chikungunya virus by nucleic acid testing
OR
3. Seroconversion or a significant rise in antibody level or a fourfold or greater rise in titre to chikungunya virus, in the absence of a corresponding change in antibody levels to Ross River virus and Barmah Forest virus
OR
4. Detection of chikungunya virus-specific IgM, in the absence of IgM to Ross River virus and Barmah Forest virus.
Confirmation of laboratory results by a second arbovirus reference laboratory is required in the absence of travel history to areas with known endemic or epidemic activity.
Chlamydial infection(excluding eye infection)
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence only.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of Chlamydia trachomatis
OR
Detection of Chlamydia trachomatis by nucleic acid testing
OR
Detection of Chlamydia trachomatis antigen.
Cholera
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence only.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of toxigenic Vibrio cholerae O1 or O139.
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD)
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified. This includes sporadic, accidental and familial cases (Note:a “confirmed” case is equivalent to the ANCJDR classification of “definite”).
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Neuropathological confirmation of CJD supplemented by immunochemical detection of protease-resistant PrP by western blot OR immunocytochemistry.
Probable case
A probable case requires clinical evidence AND either electroencephalogram (EEG) or laboratory suggestive evidence.
Laboratory suggestive evidence
Positive 14-3-3 protein CSF test.
Clinical evidence
Progressive dementia of less than two years duration;
AND
At least 2 of the following clinical features:
- myoclonus
- visual or cerebellar signs
- pyramidal/extrapyramidal signs
- akinetic mutism.
Variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (vCJD)
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified (Note:a “confirmed” case is equivalent to the ANCJDR classification of “definite”).
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence AND clinical evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Neuropathological confirmation of vCJD.
Clinical evidence
Progressive neuropsychiatric disorder.
Probable case
A probable case requires clinical definitive evidence
OR
Clinical suggestive evidence AND laboratory suggestive evidence.
Clinical definitive evidence
- Progressive neuropsychiatric disorder AND duration of illness greater than six months AND routine investigations do not suggest an alternative diagnosis AND no history of potential iatrogenic exposure AND no evidence of a familial form of TSE.
AND
- Four of the following symptoms:
- Early psychiatric symptoms
- Persistent painful sensory symptoms
- Ataxia
- Myoclonus or chorea or dystonia
- Dementia
AND
- Bilateral pulvinar high signals on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans
AND
- Electroencephalogram (EEG) which does not exhibit the typical appearance of classic CJD.
Clinical suggestive evidence
- Progressive neuropsychiatric disorder AND duration of illness greater than six months AND routine investigations do not suggest an alternative diagnosis AND no history of potential iatrogenic exposure AND no evidence of a familial form of TSE.
Laboratory suggestive evidence
- A PrPSC positive tonsil biopsy.
Cryptosporidiosis
Reporting
Only confirmed cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence only.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Detection of Cryptosporidium.
Dengue virusinfection
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires:
Laboratory definitive evidence AND clinical evidence
Laboratory definitive evidence[1]
Isolation of dengue virus
OR
Detection of dengue virus by nucleic acid testing
OR
Detection of non-structural protein 1 (NS1) antigen in blood by EIA
OR
IgG seroconversion or a significant increase in antibody level or a fourfold or greater rise in titre to
dengue virus, proven by neutralisation or another specific test
OR
Detection of dengue virus-specific IgM in cerebrospinal fluid, in the absence of IgM to Murray Valley
encephalitis, West Nile virus /Kunjin, or Japanese encephalitis viruses
Clinical evidence
A clinically compatible illness (e.g. fever, headache, arthralgia, myalgia, rash, nausea/vomiting)
Probable case
A probable case requires:
Laboratory suggestive evidence AND clinical evidence AND epidemiological evidence
OR
Clinical evidence AND household epidemiological evidence
Laboratory suggestive evidence
Detection of NS1 antigen in blood by a rapid antigen test[2]
OR
Detection of dengue virus-specific IgM in blood
Clinical evidence
As for confirmed case
Epidemiological evidence
Exposure, between 3 and 14 days prior to onset, in
EITHER
a country with known dengue activity
OR
a dengue-receptive area[3] in Australia WHERE a locally-acquired or imported case has been documented with onset within a month
Household epidemiological evidence
Living in the same house[4] as a locally-acquired case in a dengue-receptive area3 of Australia within a month of the onset in the case.
AND
At least one case in the chain of epidemiologically linked cases (which may involve many cases) is laboratory confirmed.
Diphtheria
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence and clinical evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Isolation of toxigenic*Corynebacterium diphtheriae or toxigenic*C. ulcerans from site of clinical evidence.
Clinical evidence – confirmed case
Upper respiratory tract infection
OR
Skin lesion
Probable case
A probable case requires:
Laboratory suggestive evidence AND clinical evidence
OR
Clinical evidence AND epidemiological evidence.
Laboratory suggestive evidence
Isolation of C. diphtheriae or C. ulcerans from a respiratory tract specimen (toxin production unknown).
Clinical evidence – probable case
Upper respiratory tract infection with an adherent membrane of the nose, pharynx, tonsils or larynx
Epidemiological evidence
An epidemiological link is established when there is:
Contact between two people involving a plausible mode of transmission at a time when:
a. one of them is likely to be infectious (usually 2 weeks or less and seldom more than 4 weeks after onset of symptoms)
AND
b. the other has an illness which starts within approximately 2-5 days after this contact
AND
At least one case in the chain of epidemiologically linked cases (which may involve many cases) is laboratory confirmed.
*as indicated by detection of toxin gene by nucleic acid testing
Donovanosis
Reporting
Both confirmed cases and probable cases should be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requires laboratory definitive evidence AND clinical evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
Demonstration of intracellular Donovan bodies on smears or biopsy specimens taken from a lesion
OR
Detection of Calymmatobacterium granulomatis by nucleic acid testing of a specimen taken from a lesion.
Clinical evidence
Clinically compatible illness involving genital ulceration.
Probable case
A probable case requires clinical evidence AND epidemiological evidence.
Clinical evidence
As with confirmed case.
Epidemiological evidence
A compatible sexual risk history in a person from an endemic area
OR
A compatible sexual risk history involving sexual contact with someone from an endemic area.
Flavivirus infection (unspecified) including Zika virus case definition
This document contains the case definitions for Flavivirus infection - unspecified (including Zika virus infection) which is nationally notifiable within Australia. This definition should be used to determine whether a case should be notified.
Australian national notifiable diseases case definitions - Flavivirus infection (unspecified)
Note
1. It is recognised that some cases of human infection cannot be attributed to a single flavivirus. This may either be because the serology shows specific antibody to more than one virus, specific antibody cannot be assigned based on the tests available in Australian reference laboratories, or a flavivirus is detected that cannot be identified.
2. Confirmation by a second arbovirus reference laboratory is required if the case cannot be attributed to known flaviviruses.
3. Occasional human infections occur due to other known flaviviruses, such as Kokobera, Alfuy, Edge Hill and Stratford viruses.
Reporting
Onlyconfirmed casesshould be notified.
Confirmed case
A confirmed case requireslaboratory definitive evidenceANDclinical evidence.
Laboratory definitive evidence
1. Isolation of a flavivirus that cannot be identified in Australian reference laboratories or which is identified as one of the flaviviruses not otherwise classified
OR
2. Detection of a flavivirus, by nucleic acid testing, that cannot be identified in Australian reference laboratories or which is identified as one of the flaviviruses not otherwise classified
OR
3. IgG seroconversion or a significant increase in antibody level or a fourfold or greater rise in titre of flavivirus specific IgG that cannot be identified or which is identified as being specific for one of the flaviviruses not otherwise classified. There must be no history of recent Japanese encephalitis or yellow fever vaccination
OR
4. Detection of flavivirus IgM in cerebrospinal fluid, with reactivity to more than one flavivirus antigen (Murray Valley encephalitis, Kunjin, Japanese Encephalitis and/or dengue) or with reactivity only to one or more of the flaviviruses not otherwise classified
OR
5. Detection of flavivirus IgM in the serum, with reactivity to more than one flavivirus antigen (Murray Valley encephalitis, Kunjin, Japanese Encephalitis and/or dengue) or with reactivity only to one or more of the flaviviruses not otherwise classified. This is only accepted as laboratory evidence for encephalitic illnesses. There must be no history of recent Japanese encephalitis or yellow fever vaccination
Clinical evidence
1. Non-encephalitic disease: acute febrile illness with headache, myalgia and/or rash
OR
2. Encephalitic disease: acute febrile meningoencephalitis characterised by one or more of the following:
• focal neurological disease or clearly impaired level of consciousness
• an abnormal computerised tomograph or magnetic resonance image or electrocardiograph
• presence of pleocytosis in cerebrospinal fluid.
Australian national notifiable diseases case definitions - Zika virus case definition
Confirmed and probable cases are nationally notifiable under the disease Flavivirus infection (unspecified) using the Organism Name field to specify infection with Zika virus (ZIKV).